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<blockquote data-quote="Juicyj" data-source="post: 2201982" data-attributes="member: 53162"><p>Hello [USER=169778]@donnamyatt[/USER] My dog has jumped on my lap before wanting me to play ball with him when i've been going low and he's a terrier, it surprised me he could sense, but was also quite a comfort.</p><p></p><p>Great advice from [USER=515320]@Ellie-M[/USER] </p><p></p><p>I'd second the CGM advice if you don't use one already, very useful for identifying trends, seeing the direction of your BG levels and being able to act before levels drop too low, the NHS advice is to run slightly higher to improve hypo sensitivity. It could be a one off as your levels could of been dropping very quickly so hoping your incident was a one off and that this isn't an issue, If you drive it could impact on your ability to do so if you do lose this awareness so hope it's not an issue for you. Best wishes J</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Juicyj, post: 2201982, member: 53162"] Hello [USER=169778]@donnamyatt[/USER] My dog has jumped on my lap before wanting me to play ball with him when i've been going low and he's a terrier, it surprised me he could sense, but was also quite a comfort. Great advice from [USER=515320]@Ellie-M[/USER] I'd second the CGM advice if you don't use one already, very useful for identifying trends, seeing the direction of your BG levels and being able to act before levels drop too low, the NHS advice is to run slightly higher to improve hypo sensitivity. It could be a one off as your levels could of been dropping very quickly so hoping your incident was a one off and that this isn't an issue, If you drive it could impact on your ability to do so if you do lose this awareness so hope it's not an issue for you. Best wishes J [/QUOTE]
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